Pillagerslay3r_64
When the world goes quiet, the objects remain.
In an abandoned room untouched by humans, everyday objects awaken to a strange new reality: their functions still work, but their purpose is gone. A lamp still shines, a clock still ticks, a mirror still reflects-but no one needs them anymore.
Freed from use yet trapped in habit, the objects begin to speak, move, and feel. What starts as confusion becomes connection. Without owners to define them, they must decide who they are to each other.
Light falls in love with darkness.
Time argues with stillness.
Power becomes intimacy.
Comfort demands reciprocity.
At the center is Luma, a desk lamp who believes love means illumination, and Shade, a curtain who believes love means protection. Their slow, impossible romance sets the emotional tone of the room: can opposites care for each other without erasing themselves?
Around them, other relationships unfold:
Ticks, the wall clock, clings to order and sequence, while Loop, a broken stopwatch, seduces him with freedom from meaning.
Coil, a charger desperate for connection, binds himself to Brick, a power strip forced to ration energy, turning love into control.
Vera, the sofa who once carried everyone's weight, must learn how to be held herself.
Echo, the mirror, searches for identity in a world with nothing left to reflect.
As time passes, the room begins to decay. Power weakens. Light fades. Dust settles. Objects face a final truth: love is no longer about being useful-it is about choosing each other even as they break.
The story builds toward an intimate, existential reckoning: when function ends, affection becomes the last form of survival.
OBJECT LOVE is a romantic, philosophical meditation on intimacy, abandonment, and connection-told entirely through the emotional lives of things we never thought could love, yet understand us perfectly.